
The new spin given the Silver Age thought beasts gave me quite a kick, but then, so did every other aspect of the issue. Alura, who has been presented as a one-note tyrant for a while, receives an injection of depth. A movement for equality is born. And Kal and Kara actually act like the loving cousins they should be. Writers James Robinson and Greg Rucka have hit the ground running with this book, quickly making New Krypton more than a blueprint for a world, and populating it with believable people.
And all of it is beautifully illustrated by Pete Woods, who draws people as attractive, but not unfeasibly so. What's more, he has a terrific touch with critters - as well as the thought beasts we're treated to the porcupine on steroids that is the torquat. Can a three-eyed Kryptonian babootch be far behind? Credit too to letter Steve Wands, who doesn't put a font wrong with a wordy script, and colourist Brad Anderson, who gives groovy fractal. In fact, let's scan in half a spread, not only to show you Anderson's jolly hues, but the sure-to-be-trendsetting hair fashion of Auntie Alura:

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